Haiti must avoid many pitfalls in its reconstruction, warns Thomas-Maret: “Elected officials and urban planners from Haiti will have to gauge the needs of the local population in their reconstruction plan. The mistake would be to parachute a team of international experts who would impose their vision without consulting the local expertise.”

In New Orleans, a reconstruction plan was recently adopted by citizens and elected officials, close to five years after the disaster. It was a long participative process because an initial plan by an outside committee of experts was very poorly received ““ precisely what Haiti must avoid. “After providing citizens with temporary lodging and rebuilding the basic water, electricity and sewer infrastructures, decisions regarding the reconstruction mustn’t be rushed, because mistakes will be difficult to correct,” says Thomas-Maret.

Thomas-Maret says Port-au-Prince was ill prepared to face its earthquake. If the capital had possessed an emergency plan the impact of the earthquake could have been much less dramatic. “That said, urban planning in New Orleans didn’t take into consideration the vulnerabilities of its territory,” she says. “Three weeks prior to the hurricane, I remember speaking with a hydrologist about the technical possibility of the dikes rupturing. His modeling clearly predicted what happened.”

Thomas-Maret teaches a course concerning the risks of catastrophes and climate change on cities as well as the stakes of sustainable development in urban planning. She also supervises three graduate students who are currently studying the reconstruction of New Orleans.